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  Second lawyer in Saddam trial assassinated   (AP)  Updated: 2005-11-09 07:53  
 "The aim of these organized attacks is to scare Arab and foreign lawyers," 
al-Dulaimi told Al-Jazeera television. "We call upon the international 
community, especially the secretary-general of the United Nations, to send an 
investigative committee because the situation is unbearable." 
 Saddam and seven co-defendants went on trial Oct. 19 in a special court in 
the heavily guarded Green Zone. They are charged in the 1982 deaths of 148 
Shiite Muslims in Dujail following an assassination attempt against Saddam in 
that town north of Baghdad. 
 Trial judge Rizgar Mohammed Amin postponed the proceedings until Nov. 28 to 
allow the defense time to prepare. 
 After the killing of the first lawyer, defense attorneys announced they would 
not cooperate with the court and would refuse to appear at the next session 
until they were satisfied with security. Kubba said the lawyers twice turned 
down invitations to move to the Green Zone, where they could be protected by 
U.S. and other international troops. 
 
 
 
 
   The United States condemned a fatal attack in 
 Iraq against defense lawyers defending some of Saddam Hussein's 
 co-defendants, killing Adil Mohammed Abbas, lawyer for former vice 
 president Taha Yassin Ramadan and wounding Tamer Hamud Hadi, pictured 
 October 2005, who is a lawyer for Barzan al-Tikriti. 
 [AFP/file] |   In a statement, U.S. Embassy 
spokeswoman Elizabeth Colton said the United States "considers defense counsel a 
vital part of the judicial process" and puts a priority on their security. "All 
parties have been offered various security measures and some have accepted," she 
added. 
The United States has worked for years to train an Iraqi judiciary to conduct 
the proceedings by international standards. 
 Richard Dicker, an expert in international law at the New York-based Human 
Rights Watch, said a fair trial is impossible "if effective measures are not 
implemented to provide security for defense attorney who are clearly at risk." 
 Elise Groulx, president of the International Criminal Defense Attorneys 
Association, voiced similar concerns. 
 "If we want the trial to restore peace and security to this country, we have 
to ensure it is fair and effective. Of course, there can be no legitimate, fair 
trial if there is no effective defense," Groulx said. 
 White House spokesman Scott McClellan acknowledged the necessity of ensuring 
"that you have the security environment in place for those trials to proceed and 
for witnesses to be able to participate in the trial as well in a secure way." 
 In other developments Tuesday: 
 _The U.S. military said Marines and Iraqi troops had secured Husaybah after 
four days of fighting with al-Qaida-led insurgents in the town on the Syrian 
border. Commanders had described the town as a major entry point for foreign 
fighters sneaking into Iraq from Syria. 
 _Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, during a visit to Rome, repeated his 
prediction that his country's security forces will be ready to begin taking over 
from coalition troops around the end of next year. 
 _One civilian was killed when gunmen opened fire in the Dora district in the 
capital. 
 _A car bomb exploded near Baghdad's Mustansiriyah University, killing one 
person and injuring another.   
  
  
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